Mr. & Mrs. Inglis

All aboard the chaos express! If you’ve got a ticket for this ride, you already know it. It’s the one where there’s never enough time in the day—kids’ schedules outpace yours, work demands keep piling up, and oh yeah, the laundry, dishes, mowing the lawn, and bills aren’t going to handle themselves. Let’s not forget staying connected with friends and family, even though you planned to be in bed by 9 pm…but it’s now 11 pm, and tomorrow starts before the sun does. Sound familiar?

We’re right there with you. Welcome to The Mr. & Mrs. Inglis Podcast, hosted by Shaen and Meghan Inglis—a weekly show where we dive into real and honest conversations about the wild ride of raising kids, growing careers, and managing family and friendships in the middle of life’s beautiful chaos. So grab your ticket and join us for a weekly dose of camaraderie, connection, and a reminder that you’re never in this alone.

Follow and subscribe to the Mr. & Mrs. Inglis podcast and visit our channel and our website at shaeninglis.com to check out and follow our other podcasts.  You can also follow Shaen and Meghan @ShaenInglis on Instagram, YouTube, or at shaeninglis.com. Feel free to share the Mr. & Mrs. Inglis podcast with someone who would enjoy and benefit from our weekly discussions.

What is Mr. & Mrs. Inglis?

All aboard the chaos express! If you’ve got a ticket for this ride, you already know it. It’s the one where there’s never enough time in the day—kids’ schedules outpace yours, work demands keep piling up, and oh yeah, the laundry, dishes, mowing the lawn, and bills aren’t going to handle themselves. Let’s not forget staying connected with friends and family, even though you planned to be in bed by 9 pm…but it’s now 11 pm, and tomorrow starts before the sun does. Sound familiar?

We’re right there with you. Welcome to The Mr. & Mrs. Inglis Podcast, hosted by Shaen and Meghan Inglis—a weekly show where we dive into real and honest conversations about the wild ride of raising kids, growing careers, and managing family and friendships in the middle of life’s beautiful chaos. So grab your ticket and join us for a weekly dose of camaraderie, connection, and a reminder that you’re never in this alone.

Follow and subscribe to the Mr. & Mrs. Inglis podcast and visit our channel and our website at shaeninglis.com to check out and follow our other podcasts. You can also follow Shaen and Meghan @ShaenInglis on Instagram, YouTube, etc. Feel free to share the Mr. & Mrs. Inglis podcast with someone who would enjoy and benefit from our weekly discussions.

[MUSIC]

[LAUGH]

My gosh.

So good.

[MUSIC]

Friendship, so it is good to see my

friends, give them a hug.

We can all go back to our home now and

see each other on the screen.

Yeah, you can do it.

Standing on the

counter in his underpants.

I'm gonna consider this a win.

Super professional.

That is one of the

beauties of technology.

There's always a fire,

there's always a dumpster fire.

I just gotta get this one thing out.

Just one, I just gotta

get this one thing out.

I've learned to stop myself.

Why, cuz we're flying

somewhere fun, honey?

No.

No, absolutely not.

No. Do you go buy any aliases?

Stop skipping the

toilet, I got the riffs.

Bra, what do you mean, bro?

Soccer's the best when

there's good weather.

Did you say cult or club?

It just felt like they were too manly.

And I was like, yeah, I'd love to.

[LAUGH] What became known as the mahjong moms.

So it was really legit, but

she gave me an aspect on it.

I mean, I can be Shauna.

You're Shauna the mahjong father?

Yeah, that's right.

Yeah.

Shauna the mahjong mama.

Fail.

Third time's not a charm.

It's not a charm, it's hard.

Yeah, I can only go so far.

You can't be a boo girl.

I've never been a boo girl.

Wow, the pool sure looks great.

[LAUGH]

It's so green.

It's greener than our grass.

Oh, good.

It's a metal tromp.

Yeah.

Yeah, it's good.

P.T. was asking when they're

going to get to see Mr. Megan.

It was a split household to some degree.

These decisions are emotional.

The gods smile on you?

Yes.

It's like, oh.

Yeah, those

conversations don't come easy.

Yeah, and the day

that it's not is the day

that I shouldn't be leading people.

That's when I get in the whole, like,

waste your boots up.

That is realistic.

You're positive.

So we're real positive.

One, two, three.

[GASP]

You're kidding.

Get out of here.

We really do finish each other's.

Welcome to the Mr. and

Mrs. English podcast.

I'm Megan.

And I'm Shauna.

We're here to talk about

the wild ride of raising kids,

growing careers, and

keeping life together

in the middle of all the chaos.

So buckle up, because we're all in this

crazy journey together.

P.T. You're like Roadrunner tonight.

Yeah, changed it up a little bit there.

Does it give you the same effect?

Probably.

Oh, that's good.

I think so.

Yeah.

You could just be

Roadrunner instead of, like,

a 1950s doo wop person.

I love it.

Yeah, that's right.

To get my mic ready.

It's very low.

No, I was going to get my

mic ready after I do that.

Yeah.

Because it sets at a different

height for the other podcast.

For sure.

Yeah.

Some technical difficulties, people.

It's all good.

That's all right.

You would think we'd have

maybe the production crew

can just cut this out.

You would think so.

Somebody should be

able to edit the editor.

Yeah, the editor can get rid of that.

It's easy.

Somebody can.

Oh my gosh.

So for folks watching on

YouTube, that was perfect.

You're, like, struggling to lift it up.

And it just went, whoa.

I thought it was done.

This is the top of the line stuff here.

I know.

Well, you know, it is late.

Like, we are recording this late.

It's getting to be late at night.

It's been a long day.

Yeah.

So I will give you grace.

I don't know if the listeners will give

you grace, but I will.

Well, this is the first time we've really

seen each other since this morning.

I know.

It's good to see you.

Almost 10 o'clock at night.

I know.

This has been a long one.

It's a long one.

Yeah.

I mean, this is what

the podcast is about.

It's juggling careers and family.

That's right.

You know?

That's right.

It's days like this when

I had to be in the office.

I have to be in the

office for the next few days

for all day things.

Oh, I don't know how people do it when

they work from an office

100% of the time.

Because then you have to do

all the home and family stuff.

I'm out of it, but then

come back and it's still like,

well, I need to help.

And I feel like I'm jumping in halfway.

And it's just--

Well, you've done it for

two decades, where I usually

was the one traveling all the time.

And my travel schedule has definitely

eased in the last year,

which has been fantastic.

It has.

It has.

It's always harder when mom's gone.

Dad's are easier to

leave the house, I think.

I don't know.

Well, a part of it, I think, is just the

segregation of duties

that we have.

Most of mine are the keep the house

running kind of things,

you know?

Like the cooking, the

lunches, the laundry, you know?

Whereas yours are the

things that we need.

It's the things that push us forward.

Mine just kind of keeps the status quo.

All your chores kind of push us forward.

Yeah.

Yeah, it does.

I was going to ask you how it was being

in the office today.

I mean, it's been so long

since we've been in offices,

I mean, seeing people.

I mean, are people getting used to just

seeing each other four

times a year?

Yeah, I think so.

At least at your company, you guys

are fully remote since COVID.

Yep, yep.

It's nice to see people.

I mean, because I've been

with the company so long,

I have a lot of friendships.

So it is good to see my friends, give

them a hug, you know?

It's great.

But for the most part, it's like,

OK, after a couple of

days, it's like, OK,

we can all go back to our homes now

and see each other on the screen.

Yeah, I agree.

I mean, I'm hybrid for the

most part, but basically remote.

I always had an office

kind of somewhere in a city,

but I was never there.

Well, you travel so much.

Because you travel and I

can do my job from the house,

my home office here.

But I've found, because we

never utilized it before COVID,

or rarely do we

utilize video conferencing,

whether it's Skype or

Teams or what's the other one?

Zoom.

Zoom, yeah.

Zoom, probably one of the main ones.

Yeah, zoom, zoom, zoom.

We never use those

before, but ever since, I mean,

it's made it so much easier.

I honestly don't feel like I'm not

at the office with those

people, because at least the way

I used it on my team, and maybe this was

the wrong way to use

it, but I mean, it was

water cooler sometimes.

Yes.

I didn't use it

formally every single time.

No, I didn't either.

And I think I made it a

point, and my teams and everyone

that I work with, we--

I guess our department or whatever--

we made it a standard

thing to always be on camera.

And that allowed us to keep

that kind of human interaction.

I think teams where

they're like, hey, I'm not even

going to turn on my camera, I think

they lost a lot of that, maybe.

But the other thing is, it

does present challenges, though,

at home, because I am--

I've said it before, like

my job is primarily meetings.

But I'm on camera that whole time.

And there's not a whole

lot that you can hide.

During COVID, and we

all have these stories,

I will never forget the view into--

behind me was into our kitchen, based on

where I was sitting.

Do you know the story?

I think so, but we were at a different

house at that point,

because we were building this house.

Yeah.

And I had told-- this was

truly 2020 in the midst of COVID.

And I had told our

oldest, who was fourth grade--

fourth or fifth grade at the time,

I was like, hey, can

you empty the dishwasher?

I get on a call with

my team, and everybody

is just dying laughing.

Sure enough, our oldest

is standing on the counter

in his underpants,

putting away the dishes.

And I was like, you know what?

I'm going to consider this a win.

It's classic.

He is doing what I asked him.

I didn't tell him to put on

his clothes before doing it.

I asked him to do the dishwasher.

He did it.

That's so funny.

I wish-- you always see

those videos or those--

somebody should have videoed

that call and sent it to you.

That's hilarious.

That would have been funny to see.

Oh, it gets around.

They still talk about it.

They're like, remember that time.

And then, I mean, there

were so many from that time,

because the kids were always there.

Yeah, I've had employees

that have younger kids,

and they'd always be jumping on.

And on my desk, I've got

some little Lego figurines

and whatnot.

And so I'd always put the

Lego guys up to the camera

and show them-- little

kids love that kind of stuff.

I know.

They do.

I guess.

So who says the old guy?

Daddy's boss.

Yeah.

Super professional.

Super-- I don't know.

It's a different world now.

I think COVID allowed

working family to blend together

a little bit better.

It works for us, but--

or definitely works for me.

I don't know.

Yeah, I think it did.

But I also saw at one of the companies

that I was at where

people do take advantage of it.

And I'm sad to say that, honestly.

Because most of us are professionals.

But I think if there's a

certain culture, potentially,

that it's kind of set that

way within the culture that--

I feel like people took

advantage of it to some degree.

Not the video

conferencing, but the working from home

expectations of just how

flexible their schedule was.

The nine-hour workday kind of

turned into a four-hour work

days, because it just felt that flexible.

This wasn't on my team.

This was more of a junior-type team.

Most of our teams are senior people.

They've been around for a long time.

So we didn't see that there.

But yeah, that always

frustrated me a little bit.

Because a lot of us, and even

people that I work with still

now, report up through me.

They're the old school.

They got in at 6 o'clock in the morning.

They didn't leave

till 7 o'clock at night.

I mean, you cut your teeth.

In the office.

You got there before the boss.

You left after the boss.

So those guys have kind of struggled

getting through this.

But I think even them

now understand, like, hey,

the video thing's not that bad.

Maybe just put a collar shirt on.

Right.

For the day-to-day.

I mean, obviously, when

we're talking to clients,

you look better.

A little different.

Yeah.

Every now and again, you're

like, gosh, you know what?

I don't have too many

meetings with important people

or whatever.

I'm just going to dress down.

That's different than

being in person with people.

It is, yeah.

You do look nicer.

And it's exhausting.

I find myself a little--

not a little-- a lot more tired at night.

Well, you're in meetings.

Well, I don't know.

Maybe in the office you would have been

going from conference

room to conference room.

Yeah.

Yeah.

Wow.

I mean--

I would be tiring.

You know, you're just--

Just carrying your laptop and your coffee

everywhere you went.

Yep, yep.

You always have it.

And then kick people

out of conference rooms,

because you're waiting and they're late.

Well, I mean, that's the one beauty.

We complain a lot

about technology, right?

But that is one of the

beauties of technology

is that if you use it correctly and

you're professional enough

about it, that that work flexibility--

I mean, literally before we came in here,

we were both on the computer.

Yeah.

You're-- I was laughing with you,

because it's always day four.

You know?

Always the--

Meghan Bean in the

accounting finance side of her job,

you know, they have to close the books.

And the books are always closing on,

like, days three, four,

and five are so hard, or day

four is the worst, you know,

all the time.

Yeah, say 758.

Yeah, say yeah.

But it's just always--

every day's day four,

there's always a fire drill.

There's always a dumpster fire.

And then the newest one

tonight, again, that just hit me.

Because you're doing it all the time now.

You're like, oh, I just got

to get this one thing out.

Just one-- I just got to

get this one thing out.

There's always one thing.

I mean, I know everybody

always has one thing, but--

I know.

It's your go-to right

now, which is kind of funny.

I know.

It really was just one thing.

I just needed to get this one thing.

And then after that one

thing, there's another one thing.

Yeah.

The one thing--

You know, it wasn't even planned.

It really wasn't planned.

Something that-- this is good and bad.

But working from home,

and when you are on video,

you can multitask a lot easier.

So if somebody needs something and you're

in more flexible meaning,

you can send it off real quick,

and no one will even miss the fact

that you maybe spaced

out for a minute or two

while you sent it.

You were just actively listening while

you sent something out.

But being in what--

it's kind of like a

conference that I'm in.

I don't have access, just easy access.

So you're like, I do have

to send that out tonight.

Yeah, that's right.

You don't get as much kind of

double time a little bit there.

I was never good at that

double time when I do it.

So I just can't because I will--

I'll start focusing on that,

even though I'm really good

at having multiple things.

You are.

You're a great multitasker.

I'm terrible at it.

But when it comes to being on video

and trying to do something else, I

can't listen to the person on video

and then concentrate

on something I'm doing.

So maybe it's just a

higher level function thinking

that I can't multitask.

But I'm always-- I've

learned to stop myself.

I just have to be engaged.

That's it.

That's one reason why I

always use the video, too,

is it does keep me engaged.

But because you know if

I've turned my computer off,

I'm just listening

while doing something else.

Yeah.

Yeah.

So oh, well.

Enough work talk.

That's no fun.

I know.

It's not fun.

It's just been a busy day.

So yeah, literally just got--

Every day.

We're getting up early in

the morning before school

to take the kids.

I mean, again, it's the chaos train.

And this is what everybody does, I know.

But just so everybody

knows, the little things

that families like you and us fit in.

So we're flying out of the house earlier

than we would normally

get on a bus or go to

school because we're going

to the airport tomorrow morning.

Why?

Because we're flying

somewhere fun, honey?

No.

No, absolutely not.

Our kids.

We're going there to

get our global entry.

Interviews for the children.

Because you and I have our global entries

since we're going out of

the country this summer.

But they make it very clear you are not

allowed to bring your

children through global entry

if they don't have their own--

Global entry.

Cards, right.

Yes.

Someone at customs was

very clear about that in one

of the trips that we took recently.

OK.

Yeah.

Got it.

Sorry.

I don't think that was recent.

They were small when we did that.

We were little, yeah.

I remember where we were.

But anyway, so that's--

so yeah, we'll do that.

And then we'll drop

everybody off at school

and have a regular full normal day again.

Right.

Right.

But nothing like getting going fast.

Nothing like getting going fast.

I'm sure it's--

I don't know.

Hopefully it's real quick.

I mean, what are they going to ask them?

Like, are you going

to ask an 11-year-old,

have you ever smuggled

anything into the country?

Yeah.

He'll be like, what does smuggle mean?

Do you go buy any aliases?

Bra.

What do you mean, bro?

Subskibbly the way they talk right now.

Subskibbly toilet.

I got the riz.

Like--

That's right.

I don't know what any of that means.

I hope I didn't offend anyone.

The skis.

Yeah.

Yeah.

We'll have to remind our

children to speak properly

tomorrow morning.

Yeah.

Uh-huh.

[LAUGHTER]

I do wonder, like, what

are you going to ask them?

Well, we'll find out.

What other names have you gone by?

Three minors.

You know, they might not even know

how to spell their middle names.

Yeah.

Are these your-- have

you been married before?

I'm 11.

What country are we in here?

Right.

So that'll be fun.

Not really fun, but I

guess I'm just summing that up.

We'll get it in there.

There's been a couple things

that we've had to squeeze in.

You know, had to take

the daughter to urgent care

on top of you coming back from--

how was this weekend in Austin?

Yeah, I was going to get to that one.

It was great, you know.

It was good weather.

Soccer's the best when

there's good weather.

Yes.

And you're sitting on the

side of the lane, not freezing,

not sweating to

death, because it's usually

10 months of the year in Texas.

Soccer is either way too cold.

Yes.

It gets super cold here.

It does.

Like, I've worn--

I wear way too many layers.

Enough that I could

go skiing in it easily.

Yeah.

Maybe more than when I go skiing.

There are times when you

need to use two hands to count

the layers that you have.

Yeah.

So it gets really cold.

Or it's too hot.

I don't know how you move.

Like--

I mean, they've played in--

what's the lowest

temperature we've played in?

Like, actual or wind chill?

Because I mean--

With wind chill down here.

Oh, it's easily gotten in

the single, if not negatives.

I mean--

We've been right near zero.

We've been right near

zero with wind chill.

So that's cold.

And that was 17, like, actual or

something like that.

And we played.

They don't ever stop.

No.

I get that.

People in Minnesota might

think that's not a big deal.

But I don't think soccer

season's year round there.

Soccer season here for our

club soccer is year round.

Year round.

So there is no time off.

Other than maybe they

might give us July off.

Yeah.

Yeah.

And usually it's two

or three weeks in July.

Yeah, if your kid's committed to a club,

then you get July off.

Did you say cult or club?

I think you know

where I'm going with that.

Yeah.

I mean, they're really--

they're not that far off.

It's insane.

A word.

Or we'll play in 112.

I think it's the

hottest we've ever played in.

It was 112.

And they played.

The kids played.

Thank god they gave them

a break, a water break.

They actually-- no, they didn't just get

one water break per half.

They got two.

Oh, yeah.

Two water breaks in a half.

So every 10 minutes they got

to come off and get some water.

So no kids died of--

Do you remember--

Do you remember the one ref that we had

that got heat stroke

and started puking at halftime one time?

Yeah, I remember our oldest son guy.

He stroked and puked after the game.

Yeah.

That actually was the same

game that the ref got it, right?

Oh, was it really?

I think it was.

I may have blocked that out.

Oh, gosh.

It was awful.

That wasn't even the

hottest game we've had.

So--

Not even close.

Anyways, it was a

beautiful weekend down in Austin.

That was nice.

Our oldest had fun.

He's getting at the age where he's just

getting some good friends,

hanging out with them,

hopefully staying out of trouble.

But I mean, they have to go everywhere

with a parent anyway.

So I think it was good.

The one highlight for me

that I told you about was--

I love this.

I hope you're going there.

Well, yeah, it's not that big of a deal.

But some of the moms on

the team, one mom on the team

had a travel mahjong set, right?

And so she was getting ready to set up.

She's telling two other moms, oh, we're

going to learn to play mahjong.

She's going to teach them.

And I was always like, I love mahjong

because I played on

the computer, which is--

computer mahjong is not actual game

mahjong, which probably

everybody knows that.

So I'm just verifying

that everybody knows that.

But I was like, I

don't know how to play it.

I'd love to learn how to play it in my

mind at first, right?

Because she was like,

oh, we need a fourth.

Does anybody want to play it?

I didn't really know these moms that much

because this is a team that's--

the parents are a little

stick to themselves-ish.

Yeah, there's not a whole lot of--

everybody knows each other.

The whole team doesn't mingle.

It's not a mingling sideline.

Yeah, it's not.

So I had talked to

two of the moms before.

One we kind of know fairly well.

She's talked.

We know her the best on the team.

The best, yeah.

One, her son's come

over to the house before.

And the other one, I don't

think I've ever met before,

other than just maybe saying hi or a nod.

She was when that was teaching.

Anyways, they needed a fourth, and

there's no other moms there.

It was the NFL Draft this weekend,

so all the dads are sitting

down in the bar in this hotel.

It's really nice, a nice Hyatt place.

Oh, wow.

It was fancy.

Top notch.

It was highbrow.

There was literally an

Applebee's across the street.

But--

Fancy, like--

Like Applebee's.

Applebee's on a date night.

That's right.

So anyways, long story

short, she was like--

because they know some of the other dads.

And their dads were like, no, no, no,

we're not watching that.

No, I'm not going to do that.

We're going to watch the game.

It just felt like they were

too manly to sit with the girls

and play mahjong.

And I was like, yeah, I'd love to.

Which is-- I mean, it's not like classic

me by any means, no.

But I've always got along

better with women or girls

than I do with men, with females.

Yeah, thank you.

That's a much better way to say it.

Female is better than

males for whatever reason.

I'm just not a testosterone manly man.

And I just-- it's hard for me to connect

with testosterone manly men.

A lot of men are testosterone manly men

for whatever reason.

You are manly.

You're just not the over the

top, like, have to prove it.

You're like, I'm OK.

Like, if I would rather play mahjong,

I'm going to go play mahjong.

Mahjong looks like fun.

Yeah.

So anyways, I sat there with what became

known as the mahjong

moms.

And I was one of them.

And there's like--

there's this one part of mahjong

where, like, if you put down--

there's this one tile that

has a picture of a bird on it.

I don't remember the name of it.

She taught us the name of it.

I don't remember it now.

I was trying to remember it.

Remember it.

I know the picture of the bird that

you're talking about.

I didn't know it had a name.

When you put those down, those are ones

that you go, you go,

woohoo, and you

cheers, and you take a drink.

I had no idea.

I can't woohoo that high.

So I didn't do that, definitely.

But I did cheers.

Yay.

But it was just fun hanging

out with those three ladies.

They were fun.

They were funny.

Yeah.

They were giving each

other hard times and stuff.

I won the first game, by the way.

But the teacher, if she

ever hears this, I will say,

she gave me an asterisk on it.

Because you're not

supposed to have more than--

oh, I don't remember it.

I think 12 tiles.

OK.

And for some reason,

I had accumulated 16.

That's a lot.

But they're all on the side.

So I had to put those down.

I think I just forgot to

discard the ones when I picked up

the new ones.

So it was really legit.

But she gave me an asterisk on it.

Oh.

Yeah.

But I won the first one.

So anyways, it was fun.

Mahjong moms.

Funny, tomorrow-- or

maybe it's Thursday--

is International Mahjong Day.

You're kidding.

No.

So I did send a shout

out to the Mahjong moms.

You have to.

Yeah.

Because I'm one of them.

So they were calling me--

I mean, they didn't call me.

I threw it out there for them.

I'm like, that's all right.

I'm fine being a Mahjong mom.

I mean, I can be Shauna.

That's fine.

You're Shauna the Mahjong mama?

Yeah, that's right.

Shauna the Mahjong mama.

That's fun to say.

It really is.

Tongue twister, though.

Shauna the Mahjong mom.

Ooh, gah.

Fail.

Third time's not a charm.

Not a charm.

It's hard.

So that was fun.

Our oldest played well.

It's neat, because we're

just getting at that age

where there literally

are scouts walking around.

You can see them.

They've got clipboards.

They don't blend in all that well.

Really?

Because these are the

higher tiers of soccer clubs.

So a lot of these kids are being scouted

for semi-professional

teams and college teams.

Right.

So it's cool.

It's fun.

It's awesome.

Yeah.

So I don't know if the kids get--

if they feel pressure from it or not.

But I didn't get the sense

that they felt pressure from it.

They still wanted to win.

And we probably gave away two

games that we shouldn't have.

It's really good competition.

And we play people from

all around the country.

So Nashville,

California, and I think South Texas

is where we played.

That's awesome.

Yeah.

It sounds like it was a lot of fun.

And now that I know that you're a--

I can't call you a woo girl.

But yeah, knowing that you were woo--

Yeah.

I can only go so far.

You can't be a woo girl?

I will never be a woo girl.

No.

I'll be a mahjong mom.

But I won't be a woo girl.

Ever.

I feel like you?

I've never been a woo girl.

No.

I've never been a woo girl.

I wonder if our

daughter will be a woo girl.

I hope not.

We've already labeled it.

She knows what woo girls are.

She does.

We kind of make fun of them, kind of.

No offense to any woo girls watching.

Yeah, I can be the woo girl.

Yeah.

It's a personality thing.

I was never one.

Yeah.

Do you remember when she

was little and she like--

we were in a limousine.

And she was standing up and wanted

to get out of the sunroof?

Yeah.

She was like three.

Well, at four, we were at

that concert north of Chicago.

Yes.

And she was standing on the bleachers.

Bleachers.

Dancing.

And I think probably wooing.

She was probably wooing.

So maybe they grow out of it.

Maybe it's something

people don't ever grow out of.

It's innate, maybe.

Or it's just a growth stage

that you should grow out of.

Yeah.

And you peak in your toddler years,

like in the case of our daughter, maybe?

You could peak in certain years, yeah.

Yeah.

And if you peak early, that's OK.

Better than peaking late than that.

Yeah.

Yeah.

I would say.

Yeah.

She's always been someone

with a just a zest for life.

She has.

Poor thing has been sick, though.

So hopefully she starts feeling better.

I know.

I feel so bad.

Algae's been so bad.

Our pool is green.

It's been green for like two weeks now.

It's greener than our grass.

Yeah.

I said that the other day.

I was like, wow, the

pool sure looks great.

It's so green.

It looks like a pond.

Yeah.

Yeah.

It looks like a pond.

And I'm pretty sure there's

probably more chlorine in it

than actual H2O at this point.

But there's been so much pollen.

And then we had those dust storms

that came through a month

and a half ago, maybe now.

It's just been--

I know our pool guy is

pulling his hair out.

I know.

Poor guy.

He's like the nicest guy, too.

Super nice guy, yeah.

But our pool is ugly.

It is.

It really is.

And it takes a lot of work for you.

Yeah.

It's that time of year.

And I told you, too, it's spring.

And it's just all that

work to do with, oh, you've

got to do this.

You've got to do that.

To the house, getting it ready.

I told you the other day.

And I am feeling it more and more.

I think I've just hit

the age where I don't

enjoy doing yard work anymore.

I didn't know if you'd ever hit that age.

I didn't.

I never minded it.

Never minded it.

Because it was just something--

You know.

It was kind of just not enjoyable.

That's the wrong word for it.

But it was kind of an escape.

It was easy.

It was a quick check the box.

You could take pride

in the fact, like, hey,

I'm making this look nice.

And you're being productive.

You're outside.

Yeah.

There's a lot of those--

Digging that sump pump

and digging things out now

and moving rock, stuff like that.

Some of that more

landscaping, heavy lifting stuff.

Oh, yeah.

Not that I'm incapable

of doing it physically.

Right.

I think mentally I am now.

I don't want to do it anymore.

Oh, my gosh.

Well, and your knee is hurt, too.

Yeah.

Did we talk about that last time?

You didn't.

So the funny update there was just, as

everybody may or may

not recall, we were trying

to be careful on the ski trip

that Megan blew her

knee out, everything on it.

We were really nervous

about that because my knee had

been hurting.

Yeah.

And my knee has never hurt.

Figured something was wrong with it.

The doctor never took an MRI,

but thought there was probably

a slight tear in it.

So I wanted to be really

careful that I didn't blow my knee

out, which I didn't, thank God.

Yeah, you didn't.

But since we've maxed

out our medical this year,

I figured I'd go get MRIs and everything

because of my two shoulders and my knee.

Long story short, my

knee, in my meniscus,

I've got a lateral tear.

And for lateral tears, they

can't do anything about it

because there's nothing

to sew it to and whatnot.

So it's fine.

Many people have it.

It's not like I'm incapable of doing it.

It doesn't limit me.

I don't think other than the

pain and the swelling it feels.

Yeah.

So it does.

I do have limited

mobility in it now, more so.

So I mean, these are the

things getting old, people.

Again, this is the chaos train, just

throw the things into it.

But I got MRIs on my two--

my shoulders also because I

can't sleep normal in those.

When you talk about getting old,

everybody like, I can't--

now I got to put--

instead of my arm under my head

when I'm sleeping on the pillow, my arm

has to go like behind me

or just totally on my back.

You do have some pretty odd sleeping.

It's only where my

shoulders will allow me to go

because I have two torn

ligaments in both my shoulders

also.

But none that require surgery, though.

None of them require surgery.

It's just annoyances.

That's crazy.

In limiting and maybe some PT

to go along to get my mobility

back, I think, and get

the pain because I mean,

I can't even touch my back with this arm

because it's so stiff.

But it's been like

that for five years now.

Yeah, your shoulders have

been jacked up for a long time.

It's the medical term.

You act up.

By the way, PT was asking when they're

going to get to see Mr. Megan.

Am I on their list?

No, I don't think yet.

They're like, we haven't

seen it come through yet.

Oh, well, I just--

I appeal so much to

the moms and the ladies.

They probably heard

about my mahjong skills

and want me to come in.

I was only there one time.

Lasting impression.

Lasting impression.

They're all like, where's Mr. Megan?

Oh, my goodness.

Your chauffeur no longer

needs to chauffeur you.

Right.

So I can chauffeur myself.

You're an independent woman.

Yeah.

And yeah, they're like, oh, my gosh,

we can't wait to have both of you here.

That's funny.

It is funny because, well, I guess no.

I was going to say it's

mostly women, but I was like,

actually, no, it's

about 50-50 when I go in.

There's definitely some male patients.

I need to get the

exercises, and I can incorporate them

when I do my workouts.

Yeah.

Well, they would love to have you.

Yeah.

Well, what else do we

want to talk about here?

There's been a lot of chit chat.

It has.

This is because we

haven't seen each other all day.

It's like, oh, catch up.

Or a lot of the week either because I

was gone for three and

a half days in Austin.

You were here with the other two.

And I was here with the other two.

And that was just--

I was expecting there to be a lot more

downtime this weekend.

And there was none.

Yeah.

None.

I know one of the

things you did, you went to--

we've been talking

about the soccer thing.

We finally made our decision.

Yeah.

And I can say in our household that it

was a split household

to some degree because we could really

make a decision which

team we went to for our youngest.

Yeah.

We really could have

made an appeal either way.

An argument for

either coach, either team.

It was really hard.

It was just super hard decision to make.

We tried to make it last week.

We hung on to it a little bit longer.

You went and saw everybody for the team

that we ended up not going to, which

is kind of the heart of the

old team and the old coach.

Yeah.

And it was--

I didn't know what way we

were going to go at that moment.

But it's like, these are our friends.

And this is a coach that's had a big

impact on our kid's life.

And it's just--

these decisions are emotional.

But our youngest--

I mean, we ultimately left it up to him.

And he was very--

I thought for an 11-year-old, very mature

to make the decision he did.

And why?

Because he could tell me exactly why.

Yeah, I was going to

say, I appreciated the fact

that he was

thoughtful about his reasoning.

Yep.

I mean, he articulated to me

multiple times, this is why.

I know I'm going to miss this.

Like, he completely

understood what I'm giving up

and what that was.

And I think a big part of it was the fact

that he had already mentally known

he was moving from that

coach to the other coach.

Oh, that was huge, yeah.

Because that's the way it

was supposed to happen anyways.

It's just the club

screwed the whole thing up.

It made it hard.

It made everybody make this decision.

And that's part of why

we were so upset about it.

So that's nice to have that done.

I still feel glad to tell

some of the other parents.

It's not like these

kids are 11 years old.

Well, it's a small circle.

But there is a huge chance that we'll

play on teams with these people again.

And we definitely will see them.

And we can stay in touch and all of that.

So that does make me

feel good knowing that I

think we did right by everybody.

At least I hope we

did right by everybody.

I know you had to have

all the tough conversations.

Yeah, it's funny.

That's one of the things I

was going to talk about here.

We don't have time today.

We can talk about it on a different one.

But just having those

tough conversations--

I used to think, I used to

say that I'm good at having

those tough conversations.

You are.

But they're just so uncomfortable.

But from what I see on the outside,

you navigate those tough

conversations very well.

You don't seem like you're uncomfortable.

You do a great job of

being candid, yet empathetic.

And so you handle them so well.

So whether you feel

like it's uncomfortable,

it's not from the outside.

Yeah, they are uncomfortable.

I think I misspoke.

And the most

uncomfortable part of the process

is the lead up to it, the

just not wanting to do it,

the feeling like you're

letting somebody down.

Because in the instance of this coach

that we didn't go with,

I really like him.

Oh, yes.

Yes.

As a coach, as a person--

All the above.

All the above.

This wasn't a case of

he couldn't have still

taught our kids something.

It's not a case that we thought someone

was better than the other.

It was just a myriad of

other factors that came into it.

And one of the biggest one

was when the gods smile on you,

we drive an hour every

night of the week, Monday

through Thursday, to go

to their soccer practice

at a high school across

town, an hour across town.

By the way, it's at 6.15 or 6.30.

And then the next one's at 7.15 or 7.30.

So we have to leave the

house at like 4.50 or 5 o'clock

to make sure we're there by 6.30.

So it's a commitment to get there.

And the gods have smiled

on us because all three kids

are there.

That was probably, for me, one of the

biggest factors in it.

Because our middle daughter, who's not

playing club soccer,

but her club track just happens to be at

the same high school.

Yes.

It's like, oh.

Yeah, exactly.

I would do that, but

that's kind of a woo girl thing.

So I'm going to let you do that.

It's a woo girl thing.

I hit that note pretty well, actually.

Yeah, that was good.

Yeah.

So yeah, so we can talk

about making hard decisions.

We've had to have discussions at work,

putting people on pips,

or giving annual

reviews, or mid-year reviews,

and giving tough feedback.

Those conversations don't come easy.

I do find it hard sometimes to--

as much as you want to

pull that band-aid off,

sometimes you only pull it halfway.

It's like, ah, I

should have just done it.

Now I've got to go back and do it again.

Yes.

So hard.

So hard.

And it just-- I don't know.

I struggle with that.

It's because we have some empathy.

I've had managers that

don't have people skills.

Yeah.

They're robotic about things.

Yeah.

I never would want to be

that kind of a manager.

No.

No, I actually told someone.

I know you're not either.

Yeah, I told someone that I work with.

She-- you know, we're

going through a tough employee

situation or whatever.

And she was like, I can tell

this is really hard on you.

And I was like, well, yeah.

And the day that it's not is the day

that I shouldn't be leading people.

Like, if this is ever easy, that's the

wrong spot to be in.

Yeah.

I don't know.

That's when I get in the

whole, like, lace your boots up.

Because I think they're hard.

I think those conversations,

as hard as they are for you,

I think I struggle with them even more.

I like to be all Pollyanna a lot.

And so getting real and having that

conversation is so hard.

And so those are the lace up your boots.

Yeah.

Well, that's definitely

the balance in our house.

Our kids know that very well.

Dad is realistic.

They know what being

realistic is from day one.

They've never not known that.

Right?

And you're positive.

I am.

So we're real positive in the end.

It's pretty good.

We're real positive.

Yeah.

Yeah.

So well, what do we got coming up here?

Let's see.

We have a whole bunch of end

of the year things coming up.

And--

Yeah, going into May, it's

the last month of school.

It's the last month of school.

And we have different parties and

different awards things.

I think two of our

kids have awards things

that we get to go to.

So we get to fit that in.

We got a kid going and

starting Driver's Ed.

I know.

He was all about it the other night.

He's telling me a little bit about it.

He's only got like an hour

of like a 70 hour course time.

So don't get too excited.

I seem pretty gotten home.

But yeah, I mean, it's just

all the good stuff, I guess.

So I think it's a busy weekend.

I think so.

I think so.

I think things popped up on the calendar

that I wasn't expecting.

Yeah, I saw some of that come up thinking

we didn't have anything.

We'll be getting into

our middle daughters.

Her track season now is going to start

getting going in May

and June.

Yeah.

Big time.

Big time.

That'll be fun.

It's our first time through this process.

So feels so unplanned and

unprepared and unorganized

is probably the word I'm looking for.

Although I know the ladies

that are running it aren't.

Aren't.

Yeah, no, I think it's just

because it's so new to us.

I think the difference is we know soccer.

We know what to expect on soccer teams

and things like that.

We know when the schedule comes out.

So we plan on that.

And we don't know any of that here.

So it feels that way.

I mean, if I didn't

know anything about soccer,

for a tournament, we don't get the

schedule for the tournament

until the Wednesday

before the tournament.

People might think that's crazy.

And it's like, but that's

just what we've gotten used to.

I always know.

I know it's a tournament weekend, but I

don't know what it is

until about Wednesday.

Yeah.

Yeah.

I don't know.

It's a lot of fun.

Yeah.

Well, all right.

Well, good.

Well, I don't think I

have that much coming up.

I mean, it's just getting through--

it's just blocking

and tackling right now,

kind of into the school

year, into the soccer season,

starting of the track season, just some

blocking and tackling,

it feels like.

It is.

Yeah.

I know it's day four for you.

And you just got to

get one more thing out.

Yeah.

You'll be there.

You'll see the next summit.

There's full summits everywhere.

Yeah.

You never reach the summit, do you?

You know, I feel like we're

flying by the seat of our pants

a whole lot.

Oh, yeah.

Yes, we are, for sure, more than I feel

like we ever have been.

Yes.

And it's not a great

place because you're like, ah,

I don't know.

I feel like we're making it up as we go.

Yeah.

Did our parents feel that way?

I'm sure they did.

We're going to ask them.

Yeah.

And then hopefully they can get back to us.

All right.

Well, should we wrap it up?

Yes, we should wrap it up.

So what was your word last week?

Do you remember it?

No.

OK, I don't remember mine either.

So we'll just pick

our words for this week.

OK, so we're summarizing

how this last week was.

Mm-hmm.

OK, so think about your word.

Uh-huh.

And let me know when you got it.

I got it.

All right.

I got mine.

OK.

All right.

I think we might

diverge quite a bit here.

We might.

I have no idea.

Yeah, OK.

We'll do the

scalability at the end of it.

Yeah.

All right, here we go.

One, two, three.

Progress.

Progress.

Oh, you're kidding.

Get out of here.

I would never have guessed that one.

I would have never guessed that.

I almost-- I was almost going to say--

because sometimes when

we say it over each other,

you can't hear the other person.

Yeah.

We just said the same word.

There's three episodes

to get to the same word.

Wow.

Wow.

We did it again.

Well, that one might--

Oh.

We really do finish each other's--

sentences.

Quite literally.

So OK, because the crazy thing

was I was thinking enclosure,

and I was like, no.

Not closure.

But I feel like we're making progress

this week on some things.

Yeah, because I was going

to say one step at a time,

one more step closer.

So it was like, OK, we

made a little bit of progress

this week on just some of

these boxes we have to check.

No doors have opened up.

We have some of the other things.

But it's just one step at a time.

So it's progress.

Yeah.

Yeah.

That's funny.

Three.

Three episodes.

So 33% of the time, we

have the exact same word.

Yeah.

That's pretty incredible.

It-- I think that's a win.

I mean, it's probably only

going to go down from there.

[LAUGHTER]

No.

It's a win for sure.

[LAUGHTER]

All right, well, it's

the middle of the week.

We all got to get up

and go to the airport

early, early in the morning,

and then go to work and school.

And then go to work and school.

Let's go to bed.

All right.

Love you.

See you guys next week.

See ya.

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